Sen. Elizabeth Warren: Equal Pay Is Worth Fighting For

I honestly canโ€™t believe that weโ€™re still arguing over equal pay in 2014.

When I started teaching elementary school after college, the public school district didnโ€™t hide the fact that it had two pay scales: one for men and one for women. Women have made incredible strides since then. But 40 years later, weโ€™re still debating equal pay for equal work.

Women today still earn only 77 cents for every dollar a man earns, and theyโ€™re taking a hit in nearly every occupation. Bloomberg analyzed Census data and found that median earnings for women were lower than those for men in 264 of 265 major occupation categories. In 99.6% of occupations, men get paid more than women. Thatโ€™s not an accident; thatโ€™s discrimination.

The effects of this discrimination are real, and they are long lasting. Today, more young women go to college than men, but unequal pay makes it harder for them to pay back student loans. Pay inequality also means a tougher retirement for women. In Massachusetts, the average woman who collects Social Security will receive about $3,000 less every year compared to a man in a similar position, because benefits are tied to how much people earn when working.

For middle-class families today, it usually takes two incomes to get by, and many families depend as much on Momโ€™s salary as they do on Dadโ€™s, if not more. Women are the main breadwinners, or joint breadwinners, in two-thirds of the families across the country, and pay discrimination makes it that much harder for these families to stay afloat.

Women are ready to fight back against pay discrimination, but itโ€™s not easy. Today, a woman can get fired for asking the guy across the hall how much money he makes. Here in the Senate, Sen. Barbara Mikulski (D-Md.) introduced the Paycheck Fairness Act to give women the tools to combat wage discrimination. It would help ensure that salary differences have something to do with the actual job that they are doing, and not just because they are women.

This is a common-sense proposalโ€”no discrimination, no retaliation when women ask how much the guys are getting paid, and basic data that tell us how much men and women are getting paid for key jobs.  Basic protection, basic information โ€“ thatโ€™s essentially all this bill does. Employers can still pay different workers different salaries based on factors like skill, performance, expertise, seniority, and so forthโ€”the Paycheck Fairness Act doesnโ€™t touch any of that.

Even while women still earn less than men in 99.6% of occupations, Senate Republicans wonโ€™t even let the Senate vote on a bill to help make the workplace a little fairer for women. They just filibustered the Paycheck Fairness Act for a third time, telling women that we donโ€™t need paycheck fairness.

This should be a no-brainer. Americaโ€™s women are tired of hearing that pay inequality isnโ€™t real. Weโ€™re tired of hearing that it is somehow our fault, and weโ€™re ready to fight back.  We are not going to give up on passing the Paycheck Fairness Act to level the playing field for hardworking women in the workplace.

Next, read Rep. Cathy McMorris Rodgersโ€™ (R-Wash.) op/ed, Equal Pay Is Just the Start.

This story is an Op/Ed contribution to Credit.com and does not necessarily represent the views of the company or its affiliates.

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Image: Fuse

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